﻿490 
  Mr. 
  J. 
  W. 
  Gregory 
  on 
  Zeuglopleurus. 
  

  

  LXI. 
  — 
  On 
  a 
  new 
  Species 
  of 
  Tit. 
  

  

  Dehesa 
  de 
  Cologan, 
  

   Puerto 
  Orotava, 
  

  

  Teneritle. 
  

   23rd 
  April, 
  1889. 
  

  

  To 
  the 
  Editors 
  of 
  the 
  Annals 
  and 
  Magazine 
  of 
  Natural 
  History. 
  

  

  GENTLEMEN, 
  — 
  I 
  enclose 
  you 
  the 
  description 
  of 
  a 
  marked 
  new 
  

   species 
  of 
  Tit 
  which 
  I 
  have 
  just 
  discovered 
  in 
  the 
  island 
  of 
  

   La 
  Palma, 
  the 
  northernmost 
  of 
  the 
  Canarian 
  archipelago. 
  It 
  

   differs 
  greatly 
  from 
  the 
  Tit 
  of 
  the 
  neighbouring 
  islands 
  both 
  

   in 
  voice 
  and 
  habitat. 
  

  

  Yours 
  faithfully, 
  

  

  E. 
  G. 
  Meade- 
  Waldo. 
  

  

  Parus 
  palmensis, 
  sp. 
  nov. 
  

  

  P. 
  S 
  . 
  Par. 
  teneriffce 
  similis. 
  Bed 
  differt 
  pectore 
  et 
  abdomine 
  pure 
  

   albis, 
  nee 
  flavis, 
  sine 
  linea 
  nigra, 
  statura 
  majore, 
  cauda 
  et 
  tarsia 
  

   longioribus. 
  

  

  y 
  mari 
  similis. 
  

  

  Long. 
  tot. 
  5 
  poll., 
  alae 
  2-45, 
  caudse 
  23, 
  tarsi 
  -85 
  -•!) 
  (caudae 
  P. 
  tene- 
  

   riffce 
  2*1, 
  tarsi 
  -7-75). 
  

  

  Ilab. 
  Pinus 
  canariensis 
  in 
  insula 
  Palma. 
  

  

  LXII. 
  — 
  Oh 
  Zeuglopleurus, 
  a 
  new 
  Genus 
  of 
  the 
  Family 
  Tem- 
  

   nppleuridae 
  from 
  the 
  Upper 
  Cretaceous. 
  By 
  J. 
  Waltee 
  

   G-EEGOEY, 
  F.G.S., 
  F.Z.S., 
  of 
  the 
  Geological 
  Department, 
  

   British 
  Museum 
  (Natural 
  History). 
  

  

  ESPECIAL 
  interest 
  now 
  attaches 
  to 
  the 
  genus 
  Glyphocyphus, 
  

   Haime, 
  since 
  Prof. 
  P. 
  M. 
  Duncan, 
  F.li.S.*, 
  has 
  recently 
  

   made 
  it 
  the 
  type 
  of 
  the 
  Glyphocyphime, 
  a 
  subfamily 
  of 
  the 
  

   Temnopleuridse. 
  Hence, 
  and 
  as 
  it 
  is 
  the 
  earliest 
  of 
  the 
  Tem- 
  

   nopleuridse 
  to 
  appear, 
  an 
  accurate 
  diagnosis 
  of 
  the 
  genus 
  is 
  

   essential 
  to 
  a 
  correct 
  appreciation 
  of 
  its 
  relation 
  to 
  its 
  allies. 
  

   The 
  Gfyphocyphina3 
  are 
  characterized 
  by 
  a 
  large 
  apical 
  

   system 
  with 
  one 
  or 
  more 
  of 
  the 
  radials 
  entering 
  the 
  anal 
  ring, 
  

   a 
  raised 
  costulate 
  ornamentation, 
  and 
  the 
  absence 
  of 
  pits 
  in 
  

  

  * 
  " 
  On 
  some 
  Points 
  in 
  the 
  Anatomy 
  of 
  the 
  Temnopleurida)," 
  Ann. 
  & 
  

   Mag. 
  Nat. 
  Hist. 
  ser. 
  6, 
  vol. 
  i. 
  p. 
  110. 
  

  

  